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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2000, p. 4012-4016, Vol. 66, No. 9
Laboratoire d'Ecologie Microbienne, UMR-CNRS
5557, Université Claude-Bernard Lyon I, 69622 Villeurbanne
Cedex, France
Received 28 February 2000/Accepted 7 July 2000
Selection of the denitrifying community by plant roots (i.e.,
increase in the denitrifier/total heterotroph ratio in the rhizosphere) has been reported by several authors. However, very few studies to
evaluate the role of the denitrifying function itself in the selection
of microorganisms in the rhizosphere have been performed. In the
present study, we compared the rhizosphere survival of the denitrifying
Pseudomonas fluorescens YT101 strain with that of its
isogenic mutant deficient in the ability to synthesize the respiratory
nitrate reductase, coinoculated in nonplanted or planted soil. We
demonstrated that under nonlimiting nitrate conditions, the
denitrifying wild-type strain had an advantage in the ability to
colonize the rhizosphere of maize. Investigations of the effect of the
inoculum characteristics (density of the total inoculum and relative
proportions of mutant and wild-type strains) on the outcome of the
selection demonstrated that the selective effect of the plant was
expressed only during the phase of bacterial multiplication and that
the intensity of selection was dependent on the magnitude of this
phase. Moreover, application of the de Wit replacement series technique
to our results suggests that the advantage of the wild-type strain was
maximal when the ratio between the two strains in the inoculum was
close to 1:1. This work constitutes the first direct demonstration that
the presence of a functional structural gene encoding the
respiratory nitrate reductase confers higher rhizosphere competence to
a microorganism.
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Role of Respiratory Nitrate Reductase in Ability of
Pseudomonas fluorescens YT101 To Colonize the
Rhizosphere of Maize
and
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratoire
d'Ecologie Microbienne, UMR-CNRS 5557, Université Claude-Bernard
Lyon I, 43, Bvd. du 11 Novembre 1918, Bât. 741, 69622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France. Phone: (33) 4 72 43 13 79. Fax: (33) 4 72 43 12 23. E-mail: lensi{at}cismsun.univ-lyon1.fr.
Present address: Laboratoire de Microbiologie des Sols, INRA, 21034 Dijon Cédex, France.
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